Why America Needs a $15 Minimum Wage

Why America Needs a $15
Minimum Wage
Fact Sheet • April 26, 2017

The federal minimum wage is just $7.25 and has not increased since 2009. The Raise the Wage Act of 2017 would gradually raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2024. Here is how it would work:

Raise the federal minimum wage to $9.25 this year and increase it over the next seven years until it reaches $15 an hour in 2024.

After 2024, adjust the minimum wage each year to keep pace with growth in the typical worker’s wages.

Phase out the outdated subminimum wage for tipped workers, which has been frozen at a meager $2.13 since 1991.1

Sunset the much-criticized subminimum wages for workers with disabilities employed in sheltered workshops and for workers under age 20

The Raise the Wage Act follows the lead of the growing number of states and cities that have adopted significant minimum wage increases in recent years

Since the Fight for $15 was launched by striking fast-food workers in 2012, three states representing approximately 18 percent of the U.S. workforce—California, New York, and the District of Columbia—have approved raising their minimum wages to $15 an hour.

Additional states—including Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Arizona, and Maine—have approved minimum wages ranging from $12 to $14.75 an hour.


The benefits of gradually phasing in a $15 minimum wage by 2024 would be far-reaching, lifting pay for tens of millions of workers and reversing decades of growing pay inequality

Gradually raising the federal minimum wage to $15 by 2024 would lift pay for 41 million workers—nearly 30 percent of the U.S. workforce.

Affected workers who work year round would receive a raise on the order of $3,500 a year—enough to make a tremendous difference in the life of a preschool teacher, bank teller, or fast-food worker who today struggles to get by on around $20,000 a year.

A $15 minimum wage would begin to reverse decades of growing pay inequality between the lowest-paid workers and the middle class. For example, failure to adequately increase the minimum wage accounts for 48 percent of the increase in inequality between women at the middle and bottom of the wage distribution since 1979.

A $15 minimum wage by 2024 would generate $144 billion in higher wages for workers and would also benefit their communities. Because lower-paid workers spend much of their extra earnings, this injection of wages will help stimulate the economy and spur greater business activity and job growth.

The typical worker who would benefit from a $15 minimum wage is a 36-year-old woman with some college-level coursework who works full time

Fewer than 10 percent are teenagers, and more than half are prime-age adults between the ages of 25 and 54.

More than half (56 percent) are women.

Nearly two-thirds work full time.

Nearly half (47 percent) have some college experience. 28 percent have children.

The average worker with a spouse or child who would benefit from a $15 minimum wage provides 64 percent of his or her family’s total income.

Raising the minimum wage to $15 will be particularly significant for workers of color

Two-fifths (40 percent) of Africans Americans and one-third (34 percent) of Latinos would get a raise if the federal minimum wage were increased to $15

Not just on the coasts, but all across the country, workers will soon need at least $15 an hour

By 2024, in areas all across the United States, a single adult without children will need at least $31,200—what a full-time worker making $15 an hour earns annually—to achieve a modest but adequate standard of living. Workers in costlier areas and those with children will need even more, according to projections based on the Economic Policy Institute’s Family Budget Calculator.

For example, in rural Missouri, a single adult without children will need $32,502 ($15.63 per hour for a full-time worker) by 2024 to cover typical rent, food, transportation, and other basic living costs.

In larger metro areas of the South and Southwest—where the majority of the
Southern population lives—a single adult without children will need even more than $15 an hour by 2024 to get by: $16.65 in Fort Worth, $16.54 in Phoenix, and $18.40 in Miami.

In more expensive regions of the country, a single adult without children will need far more than $15 an hour by 2024 to cover the basics: $25.53 in New York City, $20.47 in Los Angeles, and $24.71 in Washington, D.C.

Workers in many skilled jobs—widely considered to be middle-class jobs—struggle to get by on less than $15 an hour today and would benefit from a $15 minimum wage

Nearly one-fourth (23 percent) of workers in manufacturing industries would see their pay increase.

About one-fifth (21 percent) of workers in the construction industry would get a raise.

One-fifth of educators and one-fourth of health care workers would get a raise—not surprising given that the median pay for many jobs in those fields is well under $15 an hour: preschool teachers ($13.84), substitute teachers ($13.47), nursing assistants ($12.78), and home health aides ($10.87).8

All together, more than 12 million workers in construction, manufacturing, education, and health care would see a raise—almost one-third (30 percent) of the workers who would see a raise.

The $15 minimum wage would also boost pay for workers in other jobs where
median pay is under $15 an hour, ranging from child care workers ($10.18) to bank tellers ($13.11).9

Growing numbers of business owners and organizations have backed a $15 minimum wage

In states that have already approved $15 minimum wages, business organizations representing tens of thousands of small businesses have endorsed a $15 minimum wage.

Business groups that have endorsed a $15 minimum wage include Business for a Fair Minimum Wage, the American Sustainable Business Council, the Main Street Alliance, the Patriotic Millionaires, the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce, the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington, the Northeast Organic Farming Association—New York Chapter, the Long Island African American Chamber of Commerce, and others.

Growing numbers of employers have raised their starting pay scales to $15 or higher. These include insurers and banks such as Allstate, Aetna, Nationwide, USAA, First Green Bank, and Amalgamated Bank; tech leaders such as Facebook; and major health care and nursing home employers in at least six states including the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Minnesota’s Allina Health, and Florida locations of Consulate Health Care.

Our economy can afford a $15 minimum wage

Today’s low-wage workers earn less per hour than their counterparts did 50 years ago.

We can afford to pay the lowest-paid worker in America today substantially more than what her counterpart was paid half a century ago.

The economy has grown dramatically over the past 50 years, and workers are producing more from each hour of work, with productivity nearly doubling since the late 1960s. If the minimum wage had been raised at the same pace as productivity growth since the late 1960s, it would be nearly $19 an hour today

The benefits of raising the minimum wage to $15 by 2024 far outweigh the costs

The potential benefits of a $15 minimum wage—$144 billion in higher wages for 41 million U.S workers—far exceed the potential costs

Opponents of a $15 minimum wage are likely to rely on a Congressional Budget Office analysis of the likely impact of President Obama’s proposed $10.10 minimum wage. Serious analysis has called CBO’s assumptions into question.10 But even CBO’s methodology implies that the benefits of a gradually phased-in $15 minimum wage vastly outweigh its costs.

If job growth does slow, some workers who work less can still come out even. There is significant churn in the low-wage labor market; as many as 10 percent of the lowestwage workers leave or start jobs every month. So some of any decrease in the number of new jobs created will mean that there are workers who will take more time finding a new job, or have to work fewer hours, but who will not see a drop in their annual earnings because of their wage increase.

High-quality academic research confirms that modest increases in the minimum wage have not led to detectable job losses.11 It is time to support a bolder increase.

Employers that pay low wages force their workers to turn to safety-net programs for support, at significant cost to taxpayers


Safety-net benefits for low-wage workers and their families make up more than half of spending on Medicaid, welfare (TANF), food stamps (SNAP), and the earned income tax credit, and cost federal and state taxpayers more than $150 billion a year.

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